Independent product browsing guide

Search OrientDig Finds with More Context

Search by item, category, or source clue. Results open on Findsindex, where you can compare current product pages before saving a row.

  1. 1 Choose a product lane Start with shoes, clothing, bags, watches, or accessories.
  2. 2 Compare the evidence Review photos, sizing, source relevance, price context, and weight.
  3. 3 Open current results Continue to Findsindex and keep only rows with a clear reason.

OrientDig Finds is an independent browsing guide for OrientDig spreadsheet users. It does not sell products, process orders, handle shipping, verify sellers, or represent OrientDig or Findsindex.

Start here

An OrientDig spreadsheet is useful when it helps you move from a broad list of links to a smaller shortlist. Start with the category, check photos, sizing, price context, and shipping weight, then continue only with rows that still make sense.

Reduce the noise

Why start with a category?

Broad OrientDig spreadsheet searches mix products that need different checks. Category-first browsing gives every comparison a fairer baseline.

Same questions

Compare like with like

Shoes need fit and sole checks. Bags need hardware and dimensions. Keeping one product type in view stops those standards from blurring together.

Fewer tabs

Reject weak rows earlier

A vague label, one polished image, or missing measurement becomes obvious when the neighboring rows provide better context.

Clear reason

Save with an explanation

Keep a row because the evidence answers your questions, not because the title sounds popular or the price is unusually low.

Practical articles

Use the guide that matches your next decision

Each article turns a broad shopping tip into a specific method you can reuse.

How to Read QC Photos

Separate visible evidence from assumptions, then request only the close-up or measurement that would change your decision.

Read the QC guide →

Use Measurements, Not Size Labels

Compare the seller chart with a garment or shoe you already own and understand how each measurement was taken.

Read the size guide →

Taobao, Weidian and 1688 Links

Check that the active source, selected variant, quantity, and spreadsheet label still describe the same item.

Read the source guide →

Build a Useful Total-Cost Range

Plan for domestic delivery, packing, actual or volumetric weight, route rules, and destination uncertainty.

Read the cost guide →

Browse the full article library →

Choose the help you need

Start where you are stuck

Most people get stuck in one of four places: finding a manageable list, reading warehouse photos, estimating the real cost, or checking the source page. Pick the one that is slowing you down.

Start

Turn a long list into a shortlist

Choose one product type, compare a few similar rows, and stop saving links that cannot answer your basic questions.

Read the spreadsheet guide →
Inspect

Read QC photos carefully

Match warehouse pictures to the exact item, then request only the close-up or measurement that can change the decision.

Use the QC photo guide →
Estimate

Plan shipping and total cost

Separate item price, packing, actual or volumetric weight, route assumptions, and destination uncertainty.

Build a cost range →
Verify

Check the original source link

Compare Taobao, Weidian, 1688, or Yupoo context with the spreadsheet row and selected variant.

Verify source links →

A three-pass method

Use the site without collecting more clutter

Pick the category first

Decide whether this is a shoes, hoodie, bag, jacket, or accessories comparison before searching for names.

Compare similar finds

Open a few rows that answer the same need. Look for differences in photos, measurements, source detail, and likely parcel weight.

Save only with a reason

Write the reason in a few words. If the reason is only hype, urgency, or price, the row probably needs more research.

Shortlist standard

What makes a row worth saving?

A useful row gives you evidence to compare, not just somewhere else to click.

The category is clear

The listing belongs beside the other rows you are judging.

The photos are useful

They show the angles and close-ups that matter for that item type.

Fit has context

Measurements, sizing, or dimensions are visible when the decision needs them.

Price is not isolated

You compare it with similar finds and ask what the difference may represent.

Weight is considered

Bulky packaging or heavy materials are part of the value calculation.

The source clue helps

Yupoo, Taobao, Weidian, or 1688 context is relevant rather than decorative.

Find products faster

Add the detail you would ask a seller

“Black hoodie” still leaves a lot to guess. “Black zip hoodie, 116 cm chest” gives you something concrete to compare. For shoes, that detail might be internal length; for a bag, it might be width and opening size.

Marketplace names can help you locate the original page, but the live photos, selected option, measurements, quantity, and current price are what decide whether the result is useful.

See the practical browsing guide →

Ready to narrow the list?

If you already know the category, open the matching Findsindex page. If you are still unsure, read the checklist first and keep the shortlist small.